History

You will write a 5–7-page research paper. The purpose of this assignment is to encourage you to apply all that you have learned in this course to a significant current issue. As a result, you should be able to draw some conclusions about the current state

You will write a 5–7-page research paper. The purpose of this assignment is to encourage you to apply all that you have learned in this course to a significant current issue. As a result, you should be able to draw some conclusions about the current state

You will write a 5–7-page research paper. The purpose of this assignment is to encourage you to apply all that you have learned in this course to a significant current issue. As a result, you should be able to draw some conclusions about the current state of our constitutional and religious history in the U.S. in the 21st century.

Look at a specific issue in contemporary culture from the vantage point of our constitutional history. Assess where the United States is today in terms of our legal and religious history.

One of the most controversial areas of Supreme Court adjudication lies in its First Amendment decisions. Some of the most convoluted decision-making relates to the Establishment of Religion. Two of the more recent significant cases are Van Orden v. Perry (2005) and McCreary County v. ACLU (2005). Both cases involve controversies centered on religious displays of the Ten Commandments on public property.

Analyze the Van Orden and McCreary cases in light of what you have learned regarding our constitutional heritage in this course.

You will have 2 major sections to your paper:

Part I – Facts of the Cases

For each case, include the following areas:

The Facts of the Case

The Legal Question

The Court’s Decision

The Court’s Rationale that supports its decision

The Rationale of the dissenting Opinions

Part II – Your Informed Analysis of the Cases Based upon Course Material

Analyze what these decisions say about where the United States is today in terms of its Constitutional and religious liberties history.

Your discussion must include, but is not limited to, the following lenses of analysis:

These decisions in light of America’s constitutional history

These decisions in light of the Christian foundations of America

These decisions in light of specific Constitutional principles

These decisions in light of specific methods of Constitutional adjudication

This paper must be 5–7 pages long (excluding the title page and bibliography). You must use current Turabian format, with default margins and 12-pt Times New Roman font.

You will write a 5–7-page research paper. The purpose of this assignment is to encourage you to apply all that you have learned in this course to a significant current issue. As a result, you should be able to draw some conclusions about the current state Read More »

Virgil’s Aeneid to Homer’s Iliad.

Virgil’s Aeneid to Homer’s Iliad.

Brief essay

In a brief essay of 300 words, discuss the following question.

Compare Virgil’s Aeneid to Homer’s Iliad. In what ways are they similar and in what ways are they not? How does Homer’s “agenda” differ from that of Virgil? For comparison, cite examples from the excerpts of the Iliad and the Aeneid in our book.

the book is Janetta Rebold Benton and Robert DiYanni, Arts and Culure: An Introduction to the Humanities, Volume 1 (4th edition).

Virgil’s Aeneid to Homer’s Iliad. Read More »

The Video Report!

The Video Report!

As you watch the video link at the end of this assignment of Mitsuko Uchida performing W.A. Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 20 in D minor for piano and orchestra, K. 466, consider how the work would have been performed in Mozart’s own time — with the composer himself at the piano. We have learned that music in the Baroque era was conducted from the harpsichord. Music in the Classical period was conducted by the concertmaster (first violin, first chair), although with the tendency of older traditions not to be given up entirely in the face of new once, Mozart very likely conducted this work from the keyboard, just as Ms. Uchida does in this video.

As you prepare this assignment, imagine yourself in 1785 Vienna seated in the audience next to Wolfgang’s father Leopold, who had come from Salzburg to visit his son. Below is a short excerpt from Neal Zaslaw’s book “The Compleat Mozart” on the concerto and the performance through a father’s eyes (although Leopold was not always so kind). Sections in square brackets [ ] are my own.

Neal Zaslaw, “The Compleat Mozart” excerpt

February 10, 1785.
On this day “…Leopold Mozart arrived [in Vienna] to spend a few weeks with his son and daughter-in-law. [Mozart had married Costanza Weber by this time.] He reported to his daughter Nannerl [who was back home in Salzburg]:
We arrived at one o’clock. . . . The copyist was still copying when we arrived [consider that the parts for the orchestra are still being copied only a few hours before the performance. Performers played from hand-copied scores more often than not during the Classical era. The luxury of published parts is not enjoyed until much later], and your brother did not even have time to play through the Rondo, as he had to supervise the copying. . . . On the same evening we drove to his first subscription concert [of six], at which a great many members of the aristocracy were present. [This comments tells us that Mozart must have been quite popular to draw such an illustrious crowd.] Each person pays a souverain d’or or three ducats [unit of money at the time] for these Lenten concerts. Your brother is giving them at the Mehlgrube [the name of the concert hall] and only pays half a souverain d’or each time for the hall. (There were more than 150 subscribers.) [Leopold’s statements about profit betray his concern about finances, one that extended through much of his life.] The concert was magnificent and the orchestra played splendidly. In addition to the symphonies, a female singer from the Italian theater sang two arias. Then we had (the) new and very fine concerto . . . . [K. 466] [These last comments remind us that a concert at this time in history was quite long. They would frequently begin with a movement from a symphony, move on to both vocal and instrumental chamber music selections and finally end with another large-scale work, in this case a piano concerto. Three hours or more was not unusual for the length of a concert.]
The orchestra musicians must have been outstanding and well acquainted with Mozart’s idiom to have satisfied his sophisticated father and the Viennese audience in a sightread performance of this subtle, difficult work [Recall Leopold’s comment that Mozart didn’t have time to run through the last movement (rondo).] Perhaps because of its wide range of affect, brooding chromaticism, and stormy outbursts, K. 466 – one of only two concertos Mozart composed in minor keys – was a favorite in the nineteenth century, even though its final seventy-five measures in D major represent a clear instance of an eighteenth-century lieto fine (happy ending), which nineteenth-century musicians found so hard to accept.
[The nineteenth-century audience would have expected a minor key ending in keeping with the general mood of the movement.] The young Beethoven had K. 466 in his repertory and wrote cadenzas for it, as did Mozart’s pianist-composer son, Franz Xaver Wolfgang. Mozart, however, did not leave any cadenzas himself. [This is not surprising in that Mozart wrote most of his piano concertos for his own public performance, so there was no need to write out a cadenza. He would have treated it as a Baroque performer would – an opportunity for improvisation. Many works, not only Mozart’s lacked written-out cadenzas. This was, in fact, the only designated opportunity for a performer to improvise, something that had been an essential part of Baroque performance throughout a work.]1

1Neal Zaslaw, ed. The Compleat Mozart (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1990), 131.

For your report, read the excerpt from Zaslaw’s book and the biography on Mitsuko Uchida (Links to an external site.). Though somewhat flowery at the beginning, this article provides the necessary information. Consider these two sources to be the program for the performance. Incorporate information from Uchida’s biography and the excerpt as you write an evaluation of the performance. Combine the sources with your own reactions to what you see and hear from the video. The report should be around 1000 words in length. One thing to note as you listen is the level of drama in the music: Mozart is already predicting in some ways the Romantic fervor of the next century.

Optional: If you wish, you can be especially creative with this report and set it as a conversation with Leopold Mozart, but that is not necessary to achieve a good score. If you do choose to use the conversation method, include both sides of the conversation, but be sure to address the required points above (biography, excerpt, and your evaluation).

W.A. Mozart, Piano Concerto No. 20 in D minor, K. 466 – Mitsuko Uchida, piano

The Video Report! Read More »

International Logistics, Inc. is a conglomerate based in the United States

International Logistics, Inc. is a conglomerate based in the United States

week 5 last paper

International Logistics, Inc. is a conglomerate based in the United States that specializes in the manufacturing and distribution of high tech equipment. It has seen a marked trend in the competition’s exportation of goods around the world. As the manager of international logistics for this company, you have been asked by senior management to help identify a new export region. First, you must identify a country to export to. Using the material developed for Weeks 1 through 4, write an eight- to ten-page recommendation to International Logistics, Inc.’s senior management advising them of a potential export country based on research conducted throughout this class. Your proposal should address the following:

• Identify a new export country, and describe the country’s challenges and advantages.
• Prepare a supply chain assessment.
• Develop a transportation plan that addresses how to move goods to the chosen country.
• Suggest recommendations for implementing the transportation plan.

Writing the Final Paper

The Final Paper:

  1. Must be eight- to ten- double spaced pages in length (not including the title and reference pages), and formatted according to APA style as outlined in the Ashford Writing Center.
  2. Must include a title page with the following:
    1. Title of paper
    2. Student’s name
    3. Course name and number
    4. Instructor’s name
    5. Date submitted
  3. Must begin with an introductory paragraph that has a succinct thesis statement.
  4. Must address the topic of the paper with critical thought.
  5. Must end with a conclusion that reaffirms your thesis.
  6. Must use at least six scholarly sources, including a minimum of three from the Ashford University Library.
  7. Must document all sources in APA style, as outlined in the Ashford Writing Center.
  8. Must include a separate reference page, formatted according to APA style as outlined in the Ashford Writing Center.

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A Brief History of Liberal Education

A Brief History of Liberal Education

Read Chapter 2 Only.

In Chapter 2, “A Brief History of Liberal Education,” Fareed Zakaria examines the historical developments and trends that led up to liberal education as it exists in the US today. According to the chapter, a key debate regarding the development of liberal education in the US occurred between Charles Eliot, who served as the president of Harvard from 1869-1909, and several of his peers from Yale, Princeton, and the University of Chicago.

Write an essay in which you:(1 and half page)

1) Discuss in detail Eliot’s ideas about how undergraduate college students should learn and how they differed from the ideas of his peers of that time at Yale, Princeton, and the University of Chicago.

2) Explain your position on this debate regarding how undergraduates should learn and support it fully, giving examples and details from the text, as well as from your personal observations and experience as an undergraduate student at an American university.

A Brief History of Liberal Education Read More »

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